epistle

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A literary composition in the form of a letter or series of letters, especially one in verse.
  2. A letter, especially one which is formal or issued publicly.
  3. Chiefly with a qualifying word, as in epistle dedicatory: a letter of dedication addressed to a patron or reader published as a preface to a literary work.
  4. One of the books of the New Testament which was originally a letter issued by an apostle to an individual or a community.
  5. An extract from a New Testament epistle (noun sense 3.1) or book other than a gospel which is read during a church service, chiefly the Eucharist.
verb
  1. To write (something) in, or in the form of, a letter.
  2. To write a letter to (someone).
  3. To write (something) as an introduction or preface to a literary work; also, to provide (a literary work) with an introduction or preface.
  4. To write a letter.
  5. To communicate with someone through a letter.
noun
  1. Alternative letter-case form of epistle:
  2. One of the books of the New Testament which was originally a letter issued by an apostle to an individual or a community.
  3. An extract from a New Testament epistle (sense 1.1) or book other than a gospel which is read during a church service, chiefly the Eucharist.

Pronunciation

/ɪˈpɪs.əl/ En-us-epistle.ogg

Word forms

epistle epistles epistling epistled

Etymology

PIE word *h₁epi The noun is derived from Middle English epistel, epistole, pistel (“letter; literary work in letter form; written legend or story; spoken communication; (Christianity) one of the letters by an apostle in the New Testament; extract from such a letter read as part of the Mass”) [and other forms], and then partly: * from Old English epistol, epistola, pistol (“letter, epistle”), from Latin epistola (“letter, epistle; literary work in letter form”) (whence Late Latin epistola (“one of the letters by an apostle in the New Testament”)), from Ancient Greek ἐπῐστολή (epĭstolḗ, “letter; message”), from ἐπῐστέλλω (epĭstéllō, “to inform by, or to send, a letter or message”) (from ἐπῐ- (epĭ-, prefix meaning ‘on, upon’) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₁epi (“at; near; on”)) + στέλλω (stéllō, “to dispatch, send”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *stel- (“to locate; to place, put”))) + -η (-ē, suffix forming action nouns); and * from Anglo-Norman epistle, and Middle French epistle, epistele, epistole (“letter; (Christianity) one of the letters by an apostle in the New Testament; extract from such a letter read as part of the Mass”) (modern French épître), from Latin epistola (see above). The verb is derived from the noun.

Translations

Arabic: رِسَالَة Arabic: ألوكة Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܐܸܓܲܪܬܵܐ Armenian: նամակ Bulgarian: послание Catalan: epístola Czech: epištola Finnish: epistola French: épître French: épitre German: Epistel Greek: επιστολή Hebrew: אִגֶּרֶת Hungarian: episztola Italian: epistola Latin: epistola Macedonian: послание Malay: warkah Polish: epistoła Polish: list Portuguese: epístola Portuguese: carta Romanian: epistolă Romanian: epistole Russian: посла́ние Scottish Gaelic: litir Serbo-Croatian: епѝстола Serbo-Croatian: epìstola Spanish: epístola Swedish: epistel Tocharian B: parso Ukrainian: посла́ння Finnish: kirjoittaa kirje
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